Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 4 Jun 1953, p. 7

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All Others Weak Imitation This Is The Real Thing! ees a T_T po ty ® The greatest horse-race in the world . was. run this week, It is, of course, known and appreciated throughout the* : world as the ancestor of all Derbies every- it a where, It is the English 'Derby, the 174th ! : ~ M EISS running ef which took place Wed: 4 nesday at Epsom Downs race track, in Surrey County, England, Crowds estimated in the.hundreds of thousands have viewed this colorful race annually, and as many. probably . will witness the 1953 revival of this event, inaugurated in 1780, ~The Derby, weak imitations of which: are raced all over t "the world, was a famous race when Canada was a tiny colony, ; and 'the United States FFaciol bye hk its infancy. And. prac wo -- American thoroughbred racing owes cally all that it is : J to British stock, of w Th two of" ih a famous i winners. of the m. feeding farms in irlaway, win- ner of the Kentucky Derby of 1941, was sired by the former. i. iN . As far back as:the ver, erby, ican eyes were i cast and Q winiip) Blon 4 \ A farm,' g 'a foundation ; to a Virginia r eding. Rock Sand, winner of the Derby of 1903, came to America and left _ his mark onthe; equine; bloogd:lings: of this; continent. met Two world wars failed to halt the Derby. In World War + - ¥ 3 i 1 the ancient race was renewed at Ne: ke as the New | bd racin I erby are no b this continent--B im II Ah FMatmotid. A : sand S' re the second . world ari, 0 SPREE RAR og Contrary to prevailing belief, the English Derby, con- A i Nonaer trary ¢ in America with {heir left sidés to thé Sai, throughout the mile and 881 yards distance--and on the turf, | - TELE The E som course starts up grade, then slopes. the other way slightly and' finally the field finishes on a gentle uphill |} =: grade.. That takes real stamina, after a mile and. one-half i heart-breaker. : i! £3 The race usually 'is. open and three 100-to-1 shots have |i «! { scored. in the Epsom classic and plentyiof Fath f! pss, i ! ,]' one at 1000 to 15. On the other hand plang iat ey |! i= | of the'event only nine horses quoted at less than even money Bis : 'have won, _ : bi : One winner was Iroquois, 2 to 1, the only Americ ved |i | and owned horse ever to win the British event. Iroquols Jas raced by Pierre Lorillard, onetime American tobacco magnate. * ' Probably everything that could. -@ FRC: e has occurred during the life of ob eon ber extending into three centurles, | But the last one you'd think to happen would be for. a - {to Jicringer? to finish fest! 0 li wha Ran 1843 Running Reim, a four-year-old, was slipped in'as |. | In 1843 F AR ES threé-yeat-old and he finishéd first!' The deceit was' discov- | i ered, however, and the winner disqualified. Orlando, 20:to'1, was Winner of the $21,750 purse. . HEEUIES I EERE 7 FE IR TS BS SR eR THT RB) Tie EAC LA BS EET 118 of hy A Set CRF =from: being; the:.worst; What she 7 wo "Don't: believe: ail: you hear. i and only half of what you see" lacked, mostly, was color-- ex- would seem to. be a pretty fair cept in the pigmentation of his = ~ motto for those millions who are skin. . 5 » i taking their box-fighting'overithe | Thirty or more years ago thede TV route. Within a couple of | "was another heavyweight who" hours after the Marciano-Walcott lacked nothing of color either . fiasco, we- heard several TView- or .out of the ring. Remember "| inthe ring. Easily persuaded the '1" nificently gifted fighter won con- "I Usistently!' Finally, Battling Siki "|!"Pitty: thousand Frenchmen came i]! tonsee theirbattle, the largest i Hi wildést, bloodiest, 'and most sav-- "ij'rage combats: in the long history, |» foulest, ,Gorgeous Georges Car-| {| 1]ivBattiing Siki 'was' so enraged at i{uithatohe reverted to toithe jungle fii: too, Carpentier. was, in 'ghastly and watching the fight, was a Frenchman who happened to be a smalldfime manager of prize - fighters. With an eye for an easy dollar, he lost no time in trying to. convince young Louis Phal that his fututg and fortune .lay Senegalese, unschooled and near- ly savage, deserted the African jungle to become a member' of the civilized world as a prize fighter. He took the ting name of Battling Siki. fa A * Ld . 7% Siki received his baptism of fire on a night in 1913, in the French city of Toulouse, No big-' ger than a middleweight, - he fought an experienced and' veter- an French + heavyweight. The , youngster, barely sixteen years of age, won by a knockout after a brutal struggle, : . ® . Battling Siki fought again and again," always matched with big- ger, stronger men who knew all the: cruel. tricks of their trade. Always he won.' When hurt or stung, the young Senegalese was like a black jungle cat savagely striking out until his opponent lay unconscious at his feet. by - * » The fame of the wild boy from the African jungle was growing rapidly when the first World War engulfed Europe, Battling Siki enlisted in the French Colonial Forces, After the war, a hero in the eyes of the civilized world, - he returned to Paris, on his broad chest the Croix de Guerre and the Medaille Militaire. . . AE Battling Siki went back to the 'ring, for he loved the savagery of the sport. He also loved pleasure. He never trained, Champagne, women, parties, all these filled Battling Siki's crowd- . ed (days and nights. When he fought in the ring, this mag- vbattled: this way to a shot at the light - heavyweight chanipionship of the world, a title held at the lime by France's idol, Georges Carpentier. : : 01 FEES BN [4 « » ' "1 THe march' set "all France afire. «fight crowd. in: Paxis records. ; Vi 3 « EN The bout, itself was. nemor- able. It was not only one of the vof fistiana,) but! also' one: of 'the pentier, realizing that -he! had! . met hig match in the formar At:| _ rican junglé boy, tried every con-| "'ceivable trick to' win, On his side, ! the cruel tactics of his adversary! shape when the referee to save: the glamorous Frenchman from! =the ignominy. of = defeat by "a lockout, stopped the tight in the! sixth round and awardetl the 'vic- "tory to him ona foul./ = © For a moment, the great audi- ence gat sturined. Carpentier' lay von the ring floor, 'his face beaten: into 'a bloody pulp.: Then pan- demonium 'broke 'loose at the de- cision given by the biased referee. Seas were - torn from their moorings and' tossed into the. ¥ 5; . Siki came: to_America -with 'the "soundproofing" at Woolwich, "It's A Big Racket To Them--Lloud noises and shoving crowds at the coronation in London didn't bother these horses after they've completed their special "racket rehearsals." The horses got their men who shout and clang garbage can lids-together. One horse can't take it, but he'll learn. England, by being driven past a decision. And, as everyone ex- pected with an Irishman meeting a Negro in Dublin on St. Pat- rick's Day, the decision went to 'McTigue. LJ LJ © Shortly afterwards, Battling heavyweight title as his goal. But high living had taken its fate- ful toll of that magnificent black body. Siki won a 'few fights; lost a few fights. Before making his - bid. for the heavyweight crown, he tried to reclaim his lost light- . heavyweight title. Paul Berlen- bach, one of the hardest hitters in the ring, blasted Siki's fond hopes by knocking him cold. It was the beginning of the end. Battling Siki"began to lose more and more often, and to live high- er and higher. © & . Close to midnight, on Decem- ber 15, 1925,-some two years after Siki had arrived in the United' States,' a policeman walking his beat in New York's: Hell's Kit- chen stumbled over . a body sprawled face down in a rain- soaked gutter, It was Battling Siki, two bullets lodged in his back. The revolver which had fired the shots was on the side- walk nearby. & * * ~The crime was perfectly ex-- ecuted. To this day, the murderer of Battling Siki has not been found. So far as. everyone was. concerned it was the end of the story for Battling Siki, age 28, the 'man from the African jungle who 'had sought fame and pleas- ure in a civilized world only to tind; death in a wet; gutter far from his Senegal home, Man Gets Shot , By Kangaroo - least, they're said to have nine human beings, for; there . are many men and women alive today |] © ers who 'were prepared to 'take '| 'Louis Phal?' Well, maybe not By " J their paralyzed oathssthat Wal- that name; but when we giv cott had' not 'only been the' Vic- |' him" his nom-du-resin "of Ba: Re tim of a short count, but that tling Siki you'll surely, recall hip * they had distinctly heard the : £10 aE Bi a referee and knockdown - time- "It all started one night when i. keeper chanting the séconds, and || the! captain-lofii-ashort-hande .,. that the {wo had been 'a couple '| British freighter sent some » of seconds apart in their timing. |' His créw ashore at a French W Vv Bi debatdahe Pos African port to try and pick tip Now that all the hullabaloo has |"some extra help. Three of the ls 4 died down, the pictures--the most | toughest; ofthese sailors spied. i x complete ever taken--have been barefooted Senegalese native wha : scanned by experts. And what | looked husky enough to make'a | i» is the verdict? It was a full, fair | good sailor and .tried to put the + zicount, xight won: the button, and | snatch om him: The: limeys:i got not even a teeny trace of skull- the surprise of their lives, how duggery or even poor officiating. ever, for in a short but bloody : So what it all really amounted /| battle;the young Senegalese stiff ; vto was. this; poor old:Joe' forgot | ened all {hee of the. prospective Tae two, things--fifst, to duck, and--: } kidnappers. At least thats th GE second, to get up in time, How- | way Bill Stern tells iteand w |) ever, wé needn't feel too sorry | have no reason to doubt hisword! reeirk for Mr. Walcott, «Its took: him ca == pA i long time to get into the big | . The youlig 0, only recently "money--but: (iwhen 'Heidid) "he | out of th jean Jungle, was a landed there with both feet. He | fifteen-year-old boy nam Louig A; "whasn't' 'the greatest 'heavywelght | Phal. f Wy Bf | he 'Who eve' lived; but He was far |' * Hiding in a doorway near by, i v 1 u { if | | > 3 " il Er) [his wild 'antics, in and out of the 3 i1higi favor. And what 'pleased him ! ii the 'confidence he had ini his skill | REE ian a i was in the throes of 'the black ring, Angry thousands fried to: storm' forward from all: parts of the arena 'as gendarmes' rushed "to the rescue. ~~ © RE WEEE Ta ho Duiring © the 'comjrotion, * the) udges held a hasty. consultation. | Vii tes after the, fight ended, 'new decision was rendered, It 'was "Winner by a knockout-- Battling Siki!" % 5 ' * (5%. The cries of the mob 'changed "to cheers.*Battling Siki was-tifted - to, ; willing shoulders and. swept out of the arena, to be paraded' up:and down the streets of Paris. i * * i Now. the former barefoot native became the idol of all France, , He played the rold to the hilt, with | "Boulevards, He hdd only to ap-. 'pear inthe streets or at the table | 'of .@ favorite cafe to bring' flocks | 0f women to his side seeking | most; was. to promenade the | Grands Boulevards of Paris with | "a lion' on a leash! f fina-dioi ¥ * w : ' Thé pridd and 'arrogance of the | 'new light-hedvyweight champion, | and ability as a fighter are indi | cated by his agreement to meet one of America's best fighters, | 'Mike McTigue. Not o did Siki Hat proposed by Mike--St, Pat- | ! FE Ns La wu FRE i rides Dat BAT - deferided his crown against gue in a Dublin arena jam- med with fremzied Irishmen. howling for thi§ 'blood. Soldiers stood guard at.tingside with fix- || ed bayonets, Iteland, at the time, || an i ¥ d teh "roubles" / i £2 > y 3 2 / £. Es | Battling 'Siki entered the || .glant explosion rocked | 'A bomb had been sef ° . Despite the tense. | 8 situation, Siki: fought | Ligue twenty rounds to | after accidents that should logi- cally have put them "out for the'! count." ! ny Take the case of the mai who fell from the roof of a seventy: story New York skyscraper and complained only of a slight head- ache when he landed smack on : Broadway. He'd landed, h§af | i 'with feather mattresses," A man named James Mantakes, lving in the State" of Oregon, a"year or two "ago, 'caught 'a'! salmon,' tossed 'it intd -the 'rear: | As he drove along, some' /dugt Cats may be "unkillable"; 'at- | R lives. So apparently have some || il ivoryginterested coming over the first into. a passing' truck loaded | © of hig car and started off: home, | and it. began to sneeze. This shook the driver considerably, Then the salmon sneezed again, and Mr. Mantakes swung around to see an angry salmon glaring balefully at him from the back seat. Knocked Cold Next moment a grasshopper flew in through the open win-"~ « dow, 'and the salmon, making .a._. furious lunge at the new visitor, fell straight-into-the driver's lap, «causing -the car to-skid violently, leave the road and land in a shallow ditch. A couple of years ago 'a wom- an was walking along a pave- ment in St. Louis, An ice-cube, only a bit bigger than a piece of lump sugar, fell from a 'hotel window, hit her squarely on the head, and knock- ed her colder than the cube. And if you don't believe a man could "be shot by a kangaroo, consider the strange case of Mr. Arthur Crosbie who, in 1946, in Australia, shot a kangaroo through the hind legs so that -it fell on its back. : Crosbie re-loaded the rifle, put- ting: the butt on the kangaroos neck to pin-it down. The kan. garoo reached up, twined a fore-- paw around the trigger, and promptly shot Crosbie through the. arm, Have you ever been run over by a 2-ton steamroller and felt none the worse for your adven- ture? A certain man in Dar!- ford (Kent) has, and it happened only three years ago. The machine passed over him from head to foot, yet he escaped with only a slight bruise. Later, at the hospital he said: "It just bedded me down in the soft earth." =i © 7 Home Hazard Most accidents--and there are iwover 8,000 per annum--occur not on the road or at work, but in the home, and are caused by such trivial incidents as spilling boil- ling water. in London heard a which she wis housewife programme in (wadiio.. Hurrying across the room to turn upg the volume, she i tripped. on a wf fol headlong, and sustained 'minor injuries, TARA" the programme for which she fell? : Al broldcast!lon'/ "Hazards in bathe Homie! 10 Load hi iba al - Rr alinl New Yorke "Streets «i In; Bygone Days ARTI rT buiii i a All diiting the dightédii-fifties, from a large tract of wasteland') «summer. and winter, New Yorkers ag--well - as visitors tothe city 1% 4 120 BU Pi wR ar tig! PU1-Heayi 'shotput + 59 oh ahd i fourths of an inch, Parry O'Bri set a.n "SRT and the ---- mark of 58 feet and one half HY wild fad HIT . blew into the gills of the salmon || i foliird! prébsima! lil LHHVING: 'out: of {:town to the upper reaahes,of Man; , 'hattan. On warm, soph 4 the , {Croton Reservoir, i:side of Fifth Avenue tiFortieth and Forty son) iiwas a favorite dest thigh walls gave it: the ook' of -a est Bayption témple/ and theil itop// formec! a!ibroad! pronienadé from which you had fine views iof tha city: to; the south, the Hugd- ison and Kgs} Riyers, and the, rol- | Hing country that stretched horth- fwd voll haiian ils i iI Biel and in" wilitér, New iYorkers whd Kept fast Phobid Av jitrotters exercised; then Third [Hrouter The: ootar os oa ; Hboulevard was paved tor one mile'! 'north of Astor. Plage but there. |) etween i ei Aa {1 and beyond the pavement it was flye miles north, On a winter af- -ternoon, with hard-packed snow... underfoot, Third Avenue was a sped along. There were ond -X the \ painted cutters poh ed genome erika y ba thelr seats wi -skin---} roth Si Ll ed but Behind, | Sorhe "6" Hof culte fe' exe' tremely élaborate' ~otAbly 'oh' with a body garved Jnitha food of) a sea-green § son velvet, ', ¥ / inch set by Jim Fuchs, 6 1 8B basbshog® anodd 1] . NEW 5-IN-1 ALL PURPOSE SAW SRT! ----went-down to thie East RiVér piers" "sidered record time--their passen- e il the" Weed | Flippers; about the great merchant "familiar to the ports of India, to i;werd dirk noads lefy/at, the jgidas, |, slipping it on a man's finger. "NTE Opet FORA 6 TRAVIS Bridge, | "fet Quick Relief irk etbelt Ae SAME of to iV ni keep 701 haopy several weeks, only Bbe, ell line im. Los There RL hs i MORNIN WANIRL "OILS, GREASES, TIRES PAINTS and varnishes, electrio motors, eloctrical appliances, Hobbyshop Ma. chinery. Dealers wanted. Write: Warcq Grease and Oil Limited, Toronto, - BABY CHICKS IF YOUR eye Is on the later good eg¥ markets, get enough pullets for prodyo- tion, We have them for Immediate deliv. ery, prices; from Bray Hatchery, Hamilton, day-old or started, Partloular A 120 John N, PULLET SALE--Day old and started while they last at these special prices, dellvery--Day old Standard Quality Barred Rock, Rhode Island Red, White® Rock, Light Bussex, White Wyandotte, Light Susséx X New Hamp- shire, Light Sussex X Red @ 918.98 0 100; New Hampshire, Rhode Island Red. X Barred Rock, New Hampshire X Barred Rock, New Hampshire X Light Sussex $16.95 per 100; Black Minorca X White Leghorn, White Leghorn X Barred Rock, . White Leghorn @ $28.95 per 100; As- sorted Breeds (our choice) $15.95 per 100, -- For Money Maker quality add' $1.00 per 100: for Extra Profit add $2.00 per 100; for Special Mating add $3.00 per 100 Started Pullets--3 week old add $11,00 por 100; 3 week old add $17.00 per 100, Day old Bronze toms (very special price) Immediate 3%¢c each, C.0.D, anywhere, : TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD, Fergus Ontarlo DON'T miss tha boat, and you sure will miss~ it If you don't buy chicks this year, We look for the highest exy prices this Summer and Fall we have bad for some years Prompt delivery on day- old, also started pullets 2, 3, 4, § and 6 week at bargain prices, Also older pullets, tupkey-poulty,---- wi 5 53 BL TOP NOYCH CHICK SALES GUELPH ONTARIO BUSINESS OPFORTUNITIES MONEY and health for You in sunshiny Florida, "47 Ways to Make Money n Florida,'* $1.25 postpaid, Tom Smiths, Box 625, Coral Gables, Florida. . OYEING AND CLEANING HAVE you anything needs dyelns or olean. -- | ing? Write to us for (nformation. We are glad to answer ydur questions. De- partment fH. Parker's Dye Works Limited. 791 Yonge St Toronto. gz FOR SALE CRESS WART REMOVER -- Leaver no wears, Your Drugglist sells CRESS, DODD & STRUTHERS LIGHTNING RODS. Sure is nice to have the peace ~ of mind knowing that your bulldings are safe. when you are away or when you are at home, Lower Insurance rates, . Don't: gamble, Protect now. ~Write for book and Information to Dodd & Struthers. 1721 Moy Ave., Windsor, Ont. 5 different interchangeable bLiladens; i *tripla-tested' steal, fheonditionally money -.back guarantee, $12.95 value, only $3.85 prepald. Details free. Wood's, 811 Mari. etta Streat, Atlanta, Georgla razor blades, wsurgical B0c. - Letters - remafled 10¢ . euch Guyton Washington 4, D.C. DOUBLE - EDGR ateel, 100. blades, Washington, D.C, Hornsby, Box 122, REGNA - CASH REGISTERS At last, Hand operated machine that gives automatically stamped cash receipt, Has ¢ clerk and 9 distribution keys, 3 colours, Electrlo models avallable, Write for fol. der and vrices, Business Equipment Ma- chines, 480-R King St, W, Toronto. LIVESTOCK FOR SALE REGISTERED Tamworths expressed pre- . pald at ten weeks $27, Grand stock cham. plons recent Rovuls. Donald Smith.- Glan. ford Htatlon roomy family sleighs, decked out with buffalo, black bear and gray lynx robes bound in red ribbon and equipped with sham eyes and ears, in which pretty girls and : : their parents took the air behind -] 1422 pundas-Sirest--West--TFaronto-- ome +A short-time --ago--a--certain--1~ ,o cers" {hat stepped along at the 5 rate" of twelve miles an hour. There were omnibus sleighs, lum- bering along behind four or six horses. . : 'Conversation was likely to turn, also on the gold rush to California. The shipyards that lined the East River from Pike Street on the south to Thirteenth Street on the north could not build enough clip- pers to embark the crowds of ad- venturers who hoped to find for- tune in San Francisco. People to watch the sailings of the "ex- press lines" of clipper ships. As these graccful vessels set off for the long voyage' around Cape .Horh=-ninety-six days was con- "X's usually struck up Stephen Fobtor's lilting song, "0, Susanna." Genteel New York had a roman- tic « feeling about the beautiful 'princes--the Lows of Brooklyn, or example, and the Grinnells of anhattan--whose fleets were as Java and"Sumatra, to Canton and Shanghai as they were t6 the har- I'bor of New York itself.=-From "Incredible New York," by Lloyd Morrise. | 3 ENGAGEMENTS One out of three times that an ~ engagement ring was slipped on a finger last year, it was a girl Pile Sufferers. When the iteh, burn and oain of piles keeps 'you awake at night, drives you {Sipont fraatie vy fp1--%0 to any drug istdre and geti a dackagoiof fen-Olnt, Bee how fast. this, .snow-white, antiseptic = Sintment ty 18 thé Mery "burning, relleves 'Wéhing, woothen palin, You wel eellef In one minute by the watch. @ne applies tloh klves hours of comfort, Get Len Ofat elubt vow nt any dedg store, Enongh Fe | it TUNES 23 -- 1958 MEDICAL TRY ITI Every sufferer of Rheumatis Palme Nouritis should try Dixons Remedy. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE: 2 Ottawe ~ $1.25 Express Prepaid ; . LIMINEX °o , " Oge woman (el another, Take u INEX" to belp alleviate bala. ated w tress and nervous tension aasool » monthly periods. - 880 QUEEN BST, EAST $5.00 Postpald In° wraboer POST'S CHEMICALS © TORONTS POST'S ECZEMA SALVE ' BANISH the torment of dry eczema I ringwo, weeping skin troubles Post's E vo 1 not disappoint you, thing, soaling, burning eczema, a pimples and foot ecsem aban. readily to the stainless odor! ointment, regardless of how stubbora hopeless they seem. PRICE $9.50 PER J POST'S REMEDIE » t Post Free on Receipt of Pri $89 Queen St. B. Corner of Logth. : Toronto CONSTIPATED | Try Fairy Quesn Ton poatpald, on Personal Interest taken, ea. Nervine and Laxative treatment, pa se, George Payton M.H., Botanlo Practl® tloner, 1288 Thames, Ottawa, A STOMACH 'SUFFERERS positive rellef for all types of stomach complaints, due to excess acldity, Try, TIM-MEL x $1.35 per bottle, . Hundreds of satis customers coast to coast, Send Moa Order or will send C.0.D, Melick's : Store, 73 William Street, Brant EE Ontarlo, OPPORTUNITIES FOR - MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JUIN CANADA'S LEADING BCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession, good w " Thousands of successful Marve! gradua MARVEL America's Greatest System (llustrated Catalogue Free : ~Wrife or Call + HAIRDRESSING B8CHOOLS 858 Bloor 8t - W., Toroulo Branches: 44 King 6t., Hamilton 72 Rideau 8t., Ottawa PATENTS AN OFFER to every inveator--List of In- ventions and full information sent fres. Tho Ralmsay Co., Registored Patent Attop ne. ¥s. 273 Bank Street, Ottawa. FETHERSTONHAUGH 4&4 Compa Wh Patent Attorneys, Established 1890. 388 -Bay Street, Toronto. Patents all countries. PERSONAL do it the easy way, ci wuarantee Pharmacal Corporation La $1.00 TRIAL offer, included. Te If desivous of ridding yourself of CIGARETTE ADDICTION Tobacco Rliminatog satisfaction or money-back For free booklat write C, KI Ltd.,, Box 87%, Tries "a mdon, Ont, Twenty-fiva delure personal requirements, Latest Catalogu The Madico Agency. Tox 124, rminal A, Toronto, Ontario, DO YOU HAVE WRINKLES? Learn as- Pl orets of show people, who have none, iotos, course, $5.00. Dr. Carl Frisch. © korn, 338 Boush Street, Norfolk, Virginia, F( 25 Honeymooners, tleton, DOL; YOUR FRIENDS! Letters remalleg- c. Five for a dollar, Speclal Rates ts Sleepy Iollow Motel, Lit. New Hampshire, DO YOU STAMMER? Correct It by musig, course, chart, $5.00, 31 auick, easy, No need to know muasls, Dr. Carl Frischkorn, 3 Boush Street, Norfolk, Virginia, BUY Braided Nylon Fishing Lines direot br ae ta from Manufacturer. Resell at amazing ofits, to tourists and sporismen., Fres - tails. Beaver Manufacturing, 782 Lafon- ine, Drummondville, Quebec, HAS Fate poured you a bitter cup? Is le bearing tai "Heavily on "you? [ ean offer a Th helping hand. \eologle Study. 3515 Write: D, 3. Whitehead, Went 31d, Hastingw, Nebraska. HAVE YOU A PROBLEM? Let this un usual answer, Literature Free, Pp, service help you find the right Alliance Service, 0. Box 1954, Trenton, New Jersay. RUGS NEW rugs made (rom your old ruge ang - woollens, Write for catalugus and orice t. Domlalon Rug Weaving Company. WANTED Ww Algonquin . Park, to Av Nunda Bivd. or ANTED--Doctor and Reg!stered Nures for summer private camp for boys In Ontario. Excellent Hace enfoy..the summer, .July 1st, through igiust 19th. Write H. J. Norton, 174 Rochester 10, New York; Phone (reverse charges) Monroe 7247, BACKACHE MaybeWarning A Bickiche 1s often cased by Taty kidney action. When kidneys get out ol order, excess acids and wastes remain in tha system. Then backache, disturbed rest or that tired-out and heavy-headed feeling may soon follow That's the time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills Dodd's stimulate the kidneys to normal action. Then you feel better --sleep belter--work better. Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now. 51 ~ . CANADA'S FINEST CIGARETTE ¥

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